I've just recently gotten into long range shooting, and this question has been gnawing at me for awhile. In the long run, is it more important to have round with a higher bc bullet or a round that will shoot more accurately?
I know there are plenty of exceptions, so here are some guidelines I've thought up that are relevant for me. This is all theoretical for now.
Shooting 300 PRC
Figure shooting out 1,000+, hoping to make 1200yd to a mile a pretty realistic and repeatable occurrence.
Shooting a ~225gr bullet at 2900fps so I get the same theoretical range
I'm looking at two bullets: Hornady ELDM at .777 G1 BC and Berger Long Range Hybrid Target at .717 G1 BC
I know at long range, the higher the BC possible the better, but at what tradeoff for accuracy? Shooting the Hornady at .75 MOA vs Berger at sub 0.5? What about Hornady at 1 MOA vs Berger at .5? What about if the berger were lower BC? Would your answer change for 1000 yards vs a mile?
I know I'm probably all over the place asking a lot, but I feel it's a good question to ask. Any guidance will greatly help me.
I know there are plenty of exceptions, so here are some guidelines I've thought up that are relevant for me. This is all theoretical for now.
Shooting 300 PRC
Figure shooting out 1,000+, hoping to make 1200yd to a mile a pretty realistic and repeatable occurrence.
Shooting a ~225gr bullet at 2900fps so I get the same theoretical range
I'm looking at two bullets: Hornady ELDM at .777 G1 BC and Berger Long Range Hybrid Target at .717 G1 BC
I know at long range, the higher the BC possible the better, but at what tradeoff for accuracy? Shooting the Hornady at .75 MOA vs Berger at sub 0.5? What about Hornady at 1 MOA vs Berger at .5? What about if the berger were lower BC? Would your answer change for 1000 yards vs a mile?
I know I'm probably all over the place asking a lot, but I feel it's a good question to ask. Any guidance will greatly help me.